Find Your Undertone in 30 Seconds

Before recommending colors, you need to know one thing: are you warm or cool? Your skin undertone is the underlying color that sits beneath your surface tone — it's the reason the same yellow looks great on some people and washed-out on others.

Two tests. Pick the one that gives you a clear answer.

The vein test. Look at the inside of your wrist in natural light. If your veins look blue or purple, you're cool-toned. If they look green or olive, you're warm-toned. If you genuinely can't tell, you're probably neutral.

The jewelry test. Hold a piece of pure silver jewelry next to your face. Then hold gold. Which one makes your skin look more alive — more even, less dull? Silver flatters cool tones. Gold flatters warm tones. If both look fine, you're neutral.

Warm Tones — Lean Into the Gold

Warm undertones have a golden or peachy base. You probably look better in gold jewelry, tend toward a golden rather than pink blush, and often feel like earth tones "do something" for you that cool shades don't. Warm skin works with colors that have a golden, amber, or peachy quality.

Coral Blaze is your strongest move. Coral sits at the intersection of warm and saturated — it picks up on your skin's warmth without fighting it. On a warm-toned person, Coral Blaze doesn't look like "a color" — it looks like a natural extension of your complexion. That's the goal.

Solar Orange is the bold alternative. Saturated orange is warm all the way down — there's no cool in it to fight against your undertone. If you want to own a room and have the confidence to match, Solar Orange delivers that energy in a way Coral Blaze doesn't. Warm-neutral complexions can wear it just as well.

Cool Tones — Blue, Purple, and Everything Underneath

Cool undertones have a pink, red, or blue base. You probably look better in silver jewelry, your skin flushes pink easily, and navy or blue-based colors tend to make you look more awake rather than washed out. Cool skin works with colors that have a blue, violet, or cool-green quality.

Haze Purple is the obvious play. Lavender with a cool violet base — on a cool-toned person, it reads as naturally right rather than deliberately chosen. The matching undertone does the heavy lifting. Warm-toned people notice immediately: they look washed out in it. Cool tones disappear into Haze Purple like it was made for them.

Fresh Mint is the strong second option. Mint skews cool-green without being dramatic. It's the color that looks effortless on a cool complexion because it isn't fighting anything — it's just quietly working. Pairs especially well with dark denim or charcoal, which gives it a clean backdrop to do its thing.

Neutral — You Can Wear Everything

Neutral undertones are the wild card. You have enough warm and cool in your skin that neither is dominant. This means the full BearForm range is open to you — the question is more about what mood you want to project than what "suits" you.

Solar Orange works for warm-neutral. If you lean warm but not dramatically, Solar Orange gives you the warmth without the commitment to something that reads as purely warm. It's the bridge piece.

The Universal Pick: Acid Lime

If undertone theory makes your eyes glaze over, here's the shortcut: Acid Lime works for almost everyone. It isn't warm or cool — it's electric. The brightness does the work, not the undertone match. You're not choosing it because it flatters your complexion. You're choosing it because it transforms the entire outfit around it.

This is the thing nobody tells you about bold colors: the reason they're harder to choose than neutrals is also why they're more forgiving. When you're wearing Acid Lime, nobody is analyzing whether it matches your undertone. They're reacting to the fact that you're wearing Acid Lime — which is already a statement. Confidence is the universal flattery, and it doesn't require a vein test.


Still not sure?

Bold colors work for every undertone. The real question is which one you want to be.

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